Contractors
Guide To QuickBooks Pro 2005
The
Definitive Guide To Using QuickBooks Pro 2005 in
Your Contractor Business
By Karen Mitchell, Craig Savage, Jim Erwin
QuickBooks Pro can save you hours of time in
preparing your taxes. But setting up the new 2005 QuickBooks Pro can
be complex and time-consuming.
Contractor's Guide to QuickBooks Pro 2005
can save hours of time in setting up and putting to use all the new
features that this 2005 edition offers.
QuickBooks Pro isn't just for taxes. You can use it
for payroll, keeping track of your vendors and subs -- even job costing
(comparing your estimated costs to your actual costs and finding out where
you're making and losing money.)
If you'd rather be building homes than burning the
midnight oil trying to balance your books, you should have this new book.
It includes a
CD-ROM with a template for a construction
company to help speed your set up, an estimating program with a 5000-item
database, a program that converts your estimates into QuickBooks forms so
you can compare with your actual costs, and blank construction forms for
your use.
According to a recent
national survey, more construction contractors use QuickBooks Pro and
QuickBooks than all other accounting programs combined. And for
good reason. QuickBooks Pro excels at all the routine paperwork in a
construction office: writing checks, keeping track of your bank balance,
sending out invoices and statements, creating up-to-the-minute profit and
loss statements for the month, year or by job, writing payroll checks,
paying suppliers and subcontractors, tracking job costs, comparing
estimated and actual costs for each job, and much more.
But there’s a lot to learn in QuickBooks Pro. And
converting to a new accounting system can be a complex and confusing task,
even if you have a strong background in accounting and plenty of time to
install the new system. That’s why this book was written—because most
construction pros aren’t accounting experts and have more important work
to do at the job site.
Contractor’s Guide to QuickBooks Pro 2005 will walk
you step-by-step through QuickBooks Pro’s detailed setup procedure and
then explain item-by-item how you should be using QuickBooks Pro every
day. In days, rather than weeks, you’ll create a first-rate accounting
system that’s an asset to your company.
Here you’ll find simple, well-illustrated
instructions for customizing the setup for QuickBooks Pro 2005, including
what each screen on your monitor should look like. This manual explains
every choice you need to make and every button you need to click on. And
it tells you how to get a trial version of QuickBooks Pro if you want to
try it before buying, and includes two other programs you’ll want to use
when estimating costs with QuickBooks Pro. Here’s what’s on the CD in the
back of this manual:
- A QuickBooks Pro 2005 file preconfigured
for a construction company. The file has a chart of accounts
already entered, plus a complete set of memorized reports. Just
plug in your own company data—vendors, subs, customers, etc. And
at the click of a mouse, you have all the information needed to
run your jobs.
|
- National Estimator—an easy-to-use
estimating program with more than 100 pages of construction cost
estimating data for general contractors. Dozens of other databases
are available. (QuickBooks Pro doesn’t come with any estimating
data.)
|
-
Job
Cost Wizard—converts your National Estimator estimates into
QuickBooks Pro estimates so you can create and send invoices,
track job costs (charge every check to a cost category in your
estimate) and compare actual and estimated costs. You’ll know
exactly where you made and lost money on every job.
|
- Blank construction forms you can open on
your computer (with nearly any of the popular word processing
programs), customize, fill out, print and send to customers and
subcontractors.
|
With this book, the other programs included in this
package, and QuickBooks Pro 2005, you have at your fingertips all the
financial tools needed to keep a company running strong and in the black.
Just add your own company data.
The Authors
Karen Mitchell, Craig Savage and Jim Erwin are
contractors, accountants and QuickBooks Pro experts. They’ve spent years
studying and simplifying the installation of QuickBooks Pro in
construction offices.
Karen, Craig and Jim tour the country giving
accounting seminars to professional groups, consulting with individual
contractors and actually setting up QuickBooks Pro accounting systems for
builders. They’ll help you get excellent results with QuickBooks Pro the
same way they’ve helped hundreds of other construction professionals.
Contents:
Introduction 5
- Why You Need This Book, 5
- What You Can Expect from This Book, 6
- QuickBooks, QuickBooks Pro, or Premier:
Contractor Edition? 7
- Why Should You Believe Us? 9
- What's on the CD? 12
- How Do I Use This CD? 13
1 Setting Up Your QuickBooks Pro Company, 17
- QuickBooks Pro Company Files, 18
- Begin with Our Sample and Company Data Files,
19
- Upgrade to QuickBooks Pro Version 2005, 23
- Convert from Quicken to QuickBooks Pro, 25
- Convert an Existing Data File to Our Setup, 30
2 How to Set
- QuickBooks Pro Preferences, 33
- General Preferences, 33
- Accounting Preferences, 34
- Checking Preferences, 36
- Finance Charge Preferences, 38
- Jobs and Estimates Preferences, 41
- Payroll and Employees Preferences, 42
- Purchases and Vendors Preferences, 43
- Reminders Preferences, 45
- Reports and Graphs Preferences, 46
- Sales and Customers Preferences, 46
- Sales Tax and Send Forms Preferences, 48
- Service Connection Preferences, 50
- Spelling Preferences, 51
- Tax: 1099 Preferences, 52
- Time Tracking Preferences, 54
3 Chart of Accounts, 55
- How to Use the Sample Chart of Accounts, 57
- Change, Add to, and Print Your Chart of
Accounts, 60
- QuickBooks Premier: Contractor Edition
Features, 63
- Loan Manager, 64
4 Items, 73
- Entering Items for a Non-Inventory Based
Business, 74
- Entering Items for an Inventory Based Business,
76
- Creating a Group of Items, 78
- Entering Non-Job Related Items, 79
5 Payroll Items, 83
- Using Payroll Items to Track Workers' Comp
Costs, 83
- Using Payroll Items if You Don't Track Workers'
Comp, 91
- Including Sole Proprietor and Partners' Time
Costs in Job Costs, 94
6 Classes, 101
- Using Classes to Track Cost Categories, 101
- How to Create a Class, 102
7 Customers and Jobs, 105
- How to Set Up a Customer, 105
- Adding a Job for a Customer, 109
- Exporting or Printing Your Customer List, 112
8 Vendors and Subcontractors, 113
- Setting Up 1099 Vendors, 113
- Setting Up a Non-1099 Vendor, 117
9 Employees, 119
- Setting Up Your Employee List, 119
10 Opening Balances, 127
- Entering Opening Balances in QuickBooks Pro,
127
- Entering Invoices for Accounts Receivable, 128
- Entering Bills for Accounts Payable, 130
11 Organizing Work Flow, 133
- Setting Up Your Office Files, 134
- Organizing Your Payroll, 137
- Keeping Office Paperwork Current, 137
12 Estimating, 141
- Using a Summary Estimate You Make Outside of
QuickBooks Pro, 142
- Customizing an Estimate Form, 144
- Memorizing an Estimate, 145
- Estimates and Progress Billing, 147
- Getting Detailed Estimates, 147
13 Receivables, 149
- Four Ways to Invoice a Customer, 150
- Tracking Change Orders On Estimates, 160
- How to Handle Retainage, 162
- Recording a Payment You Receive, 167
- Recording a Deposit, 168
- Recording a Job Deposit, 169
14 Payables, 173
- Creating and Using Purchase Orders, 174
- Using Purchase Orders to Track Multiple Draws
and Committed Costs, 175
- Entering Bills Without Purchase Orders, 179
- Selecting Bills for Payment, 181
- Printing Checks, 182
- Vendor Workers' Comp Reports, 184
15 Payroll, 189
- Entering a Timesheet, 189
- Processing Employee Payroll, 193
- Allocating Sole Proprietor or Partner's Time to
a Job, 199
16 Using QuickBooks Pro on a Cash Basis, 203
- How to Record a Check, 204
- How to Record a Deposit, 207
- Checking Your Transactions with the QuickBooks
Pro Register, 209
17 Reports, 211
- How to Modify Reports, 211
- Using Our Memorized Reports, 215
- Using Jobs, Time & Mileage Reports, 232
18 End of Month and End of Year Procedures, 243
- Reading and Understanding Your Financial
Reports, 251
- End of Year Procedures, 255
19 Real Estate Development, 259
- New Accounts, 259
- Setting Up a Development Job, 260
- Using Items to Track Construction Costs as WIP,
261
- Land Purchase Transactions, 263
- Personal Loans, 267
- Development Loans, 273
- Construction Loans, 277
- Recording the Sale of a Property, 280
Appendix A Estimating with QuickBooks Pro 285
- Three Good Reasons to Try QuickBooks Pro
Estimating, 285
- A Road Map to Your Destination, 286
- Setting Preferences for Estimating, 287
- Building Your Item List, 289
- Creating an Estimate in QuickBooks Pro, 291
- Turning an Estimate into an Invoice, 294
- Tidying Up Your Company File, 297
Appendix B Job Cost Tracking and Importing
Estimates 299
- Estimates into Invoices, 302
- Handling Tax, 302
- Using Items for Job Cost Tracking, 304
- Help Learning National Estimator, 306
- Estimating with National Estimator, 307
- Converting Estimates with Job Cost Wizard, 321
Index, 333
Contractors Guide To
QuickBooks Pro 2005
|
|
|